Box office By the morning of February 13, the film had reached 100 billion VND, breaking the record of
Nhà bà Nữ—the highest-grossing film in Vietnamese box office history—after just 3 days and one morning. By the eighth day since its release, the film had grossed 300 billion VND, continuing to break the previous record set by
Nhà bà Nữ, also directed by
Trấn Thành. On average, the film earned an additional 37.5 billion VND per day—an unprecedented figure in the history of the Vietnamese box office. According to VTC News,
Mai became the fastest-grossing film in Vietnamese history. On
Valentine's Day alone, the film earned 44 billion VND with 4,330 screenings, accounting for 68% of the total box office revenue in Vietnam for that day. By the morning of February 18, the film surpassed the 300 billion VND mark, becoming the fastest film in Vietnamese box office history to reach this milestone. By March 1, 2024, after 20 days of release, the film officially surpassed 500 billion VND, overtaking
Nhà bà Nữ to become the highest-grossing film in Vietnamese box office history. The combined box office revenue from Trấn Thành's three directed films—
Bố già,
Nhà bà Nữ, and
Mai—is almost equal to the total annual box office revenue in Vietnam for the year 2023.
Impact and influence During its screening period, many dialogues from the film also spread across social media platforms such as "Life’s too short," "Even the cleanest blanket has dust," "I want to love. I'm almost 40 years old,"... Especially, the line "Thank you for not waiting for me" has been reenacted and shared widely on TikTok. In total, there have been over 48,000 posts and 1.1 billion views related to the film "Mai" on the TikTok platform. Many debates about the film's ending also sparked lively discussions on social media. According to
Deadline Hollywood, journalist Liz Shackleton noted that Vietnam had the most fierce competition in cinema during the 2024 Lunar New Year, making it the fastest recovering film market in Asia after India. After its release, the main setting of the film, an old apartment building where many Chinese residents live on An BinhTran Hung Dao Street in District 5,
Ho Chi Minh City, became a popular spot for people to take photos. Additionally, a noodle soup shop in District 5, featured in the film, suddenly gained fame and had to close early at 8 PM instead of 3 AM the next day due to running out of ingredients to serve.
Awards == Controversy ==